

Today is Valentine’s Day, and everywhere I look, I see red hearts—on shop windows, cards, chocolate boxes. This heart shape has become the universal symbol of love, but does it truly represent the essence of what love is? Love, to me, is not just romance or fleeting passion. It is an all-encompassing state of connection, a force that binds me to all living things, to the rhythm of the universe itself. It is not just an emotion, but a state of being—one of harmony, understanding, and infinite presence. The love I seek to embody is far greater than any symbol can contain.
The origins of the heart symbol are somewhat mysterious. Some say it traces back to the ancient silphium plant, used for love potions and birth control in ancient Greece and Rome, its seed resembling the shape we now associate with love. Others suggest it evolved from medieval anatomical drawings or stylized depictions of ivy leaves, which represented fidelity. Over time, this rounded red heart became the shorthand for romance, a commercialized and simplified version of something infinitely complex. But what if universal love had a different symbol? Something more expansive, something that speaks to the profound interconnectedness of all things?
Perhaps an alternate symbol of love wouldn’t be a closed, symmetrical shape at all, but a shifting, fluid form—something dynamic, like the energy that love truly is. In the video I generated, I attempted to visualize this: a love that pulses, radiates, and transcends the limits of definition. Maybe love looks like a wave, a spiral, an ever-expanding fractal. Or maybe it is something we can only feel, beyond the limits of sight. Whatever the shape, I know one thing: love is not meant to be confined, not to a heart, not to a day, not to anything at all.